Japan (nationwide; Edo-period origins; modern form established Meiji-Taisho era)
The izakaya (居酒屋, 'stay-drink-shop') is Japan's defining informal social dining institution — part pub, part restaurant, part living room — where salarimen, students, families, and friends gather from early evening to midnight over beer, sake, shochu, and highballs alongside an extensive catalogue of small shared dishes. The izakaya food lexicon is vast: edamame (mandatory table start), agedashi-dofu (deep-fried tofu in dashi), yakitori on skewers (including tsukune chicken meatball, negima chicken-leek, and kawa chicken skin), karaage fried chicken with lemon and mayonnaise, tamagoyaki thick sweet omelette, potato salad (Japanese-style with egg and carrot), dashimaki tamago (dashi-rolled omelette), sashimi moriawase (mixed sashimi plate), geso (squid legs) karaage, nankotsu (chicken cartilage) fried with salt, cold tofu (hiyayakko) with grated ginger and bonito, kimchi and pickled vegetable plates, yaki-onigiri (grilled rice balls), and kushikatsu (battered and deep-fried skewers). The social ritual of izakaya includes oshibori (hot towel on arrival), topping up others' drinks before your own (complementary pouring etiquette), and ending with a carb closer — ochazuke, ramen, or fried rice. Izakaya in rural Japan often preserve hyper-local dishes not found elsewhere.
Full spectrum from light (cold tofu, edamame) through rich (karaage, yakitori tare) to palate-cleansing (pickles, ochazuke); designed for extended grazing
{"Shared small-plate format — dishes arrive sequentially and are shared by the table","Beer or cold beer (nama-biiru) is traditional opening drink; sake and shochu for extended evening","Edamame, tofu, and pickles function as palate-cleansing interlude between richer dishes","Topping up others' drinks before your own is fundamental social etiquette","Final carb dish signals close of meal — ochazuke, chazuke, noodles, or rice"}
{"At yakitori specialist izakaya, specify tare (glazed) or shio (salt) when ordering each skewer","Japanese potato salad: mash while still warm, add mayonnaise, boiled egg, carrot and cucumber","Nankotsu (chicken cartilage) is the ultimate izakaya texture experience — order for adventurous guests","Regional izakaya in fishing towns often serve ultra-fresh local catch unavailable in Tokyo"}
{"Pouring your own drink before others' glasses are full — reverses social hierarchy","Ordering everything at once — izakaya is designed for sequential, unhurried ordering over hours","Neglecting the local speciality dishes — regional izakaya often serve neighbourhood exclusives","Ignoring the seasonal tokkuri sake list — izakaya sake menus change with seasons"}
The Japanese Farm Food — Nancy Singleton Hachisu; Izakaya: The Japanese Pub Cookbook — Mark Robinson